Amazon Prime Day is one of the most anticipated shopping events of the year and Slickdeals sees that play out in real time across our community of deal-seeking shoppers. Here are the top findings from Prime Day 2025 and how brands and retailers can leverage them for a successful 2026 event with Slickdeals.
Before getting into behavior and category trends, it helps to understand the sheer volume of what Prime Day unlocks on Slickdeals. In 2025, compared to our baseline daily averages from the week before the event, we saw a 152% increase in orders, 278% increase in GMV, and a 73% increase in outclicks.
For advertisers, this represents one of the highest-intent, highest-traffic windows available anywhere on our platform.
One of the most strategically important findings from our analysis is that Prime Day is not just a four-day event for shoppers on Slickdeals. It is closer to a three-week window of heightened activity.
In the week leading up to Prime Day 2025, votes on deals were already up 47% compared to the prior week. Comments and outclicks were also climbing. Shoppers were actively engaging with deals before the event officially started.
During Prime Day itself, engagement reached its peak: votes spiked to 2.7x the baseline, outclicks hit 1.7x normal levels, deal threads increased 2.6x, and comments were 2.4x the average.
Engagement did not fall off sharply when the event ended. In the week following Prime Day, votes remained 20% above baseline as well as comments (+22%).
The implication is clear: brands that show up only during the core event window are leaving opportunity on the table. The brands best positioned to win Prime Day are those that seed deals early and extend their campaigns into the following week.
Search behavior on Slickdeals during Prime Day offers a useful window into shopper intent. When looking at terms that saw meaningfully higher search traffic during the event, compared to their year-round baseline, we clocked a few patterns.
In 2025, expected brand names were present: Amazon, Samsung, LEGO, and Walmart. But the list also included names like Eufy, Grubhub, Starbucks, and American Express, a signal that shoppers were looking well beyond typical “Prime Day brand” expectations.
On the product side, searches ranged from high-consideration items like laptops, monitors, and TVs to everyday purchases like vacuums, coolers, and fans. That mix suggests shoppers were using Prime Day for both planned, research-heavy purchases and opportunistic everyday deals.
When looking at which categories generated the most deal threads, Home & Home Improvement led the way with 818 threads, followed by Tech & Electronics (558) and Computers (513). These categories also led in outclicks, with Home generating over 1.25 million and Tech & Electronics crossing 1 million.
But the more interesting story is where shopper interest outpaced deal supply.
Clothing & Accessories had fewer deals posted than several other top categories, yet it ranked third in total outclicks at nearly 847,000. Shopper demand for clothing deals was strong, but the supply of those deals was relatively limited.
Grocery tells a similar story from a different angle. It ranked fourth in thread volume but second in total votes, the community’s most direct signal of enthusiasm. That gap between deal supply and shopper response suggests real opportunity for brands in categories where intent is running ahead of available offers.
When it comes to total orders, Home & Home Improvement led with roughly 105,000, followed closely by Tech & Electronics (~104,000) and Grocery (~95,000). Gift Cards, Snacks & Chips, Kids Toys, and Headphones & Earbuds rounded out the top subcategories by order volume, reinforcing that Prime Day spend is far broader than just big-ticket electronics.
One of the most useful findings from our data involves how discount depth interacts with Frontpage performance and how that relationship changes during Prime Day.
On Slickdeals, the Frontpage is the highest-visibility page onsite. Deals that reach it see dramatically higher outclicks. During a normal period, deals with stronger discounts generally earn higher Frontpage rates, a staircase pattern where 31–40% off outperforms 11–20% off, and so on.
During Prime Day, that staircase collapses.
With 2.6x more deals competing for Frontpage real estate, the threshold rises across the board. A 21% discount competes for the same spot as a 51% discount. The bar has shifted for everyone, which means a brand’s standard pricing strategy, one that performs reliably during the rest of the year, will not produce the same results during Prime Day.
One final dynamic worth understanding is how quickly deals move through Slickdeals during Prime Day. With thread volume up 2.6x versus baseline, the platform is significantly busier and the deal curation process accelerates accordingly.
The average time for a deal to reach the Frontpage during Prime Day was 11.1 hours, compared to 14.1 hours during the baseline period. Deals also reached the Popular forum faster, averaging 5.7 hours versus 6.3 hours normally.
For brands, this means preparation is not optional. If deals are not live and optimized before Prime Day begins, the competition window has already opened. Brands that are ready on day one are in a materially stronger position than those still finalizing offers when the event starts.
Slickdeals is the largest crowdsourced deals platform in the United States, with a community of millions of shoppers who share, vote on, and discuss deals across thousands of brands and retailers. Interested in working with us? Connect with us here.
All data sourced from Slickdeals internal analytics. Baseline period defined as June 23–30, 2025 (daily averages). Prime Day event period defined as July 8–11, 2025. Pre-Prime Day period (used for discount depth analysis) defined as May 9–July 7, 2025. Shopper engagement timeline covers June 23–July 31, 2025. Category, subcategory, and deal-level rankings reflect activity during the Prime Day event period only. Trending search terms reflect on-site search volume during July 8–11, 2025, excluding keywords that receive consistently high traffic year-round.